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Indications and considerations for kidney biopsy: an overview of clinical considerations for the non-specialist

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-23, 12:42 authored by Katherine L Hull, Sherna F Adenwalla, Peter Topham, Matthew P Graham-Brown
Around 3 million people in the UK have chronic kidney disease and 20% of hospital admissions are complicated by acute kidney injury. Decline in kidney function is not a diagnosis; it is essential to identify and treat underlying causes of acute and chronic kidney disease to either achieve recovery or slow the decline of kidney function. Thorough clinical assessment and simple investigations help determine the category of kidney injury (pre-renal, intrinsic or post-renal) and inform the need for kidney biopsy, which can provide significant information in the evaluation of suspected intrinsic kidney disease, supporting diagnosis, guiding prognosis and management, and identifying disease relapse. The procedure is invasive and not without risk, which although small has the potential to be both organ- and life-threatening. This review outlines roles of kidney biopsy for the non-specialist, with focus of its role in patients with diabetes, lupus, myeloma and in the older patient.

History

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

CLINICAL MEDICINE

Volume

22

Issue

1

Pagination

34 - 40 (7)

Publisher

ROY COLL PHYS LONDON EDITORIAL OFFICE

issn

1470-2118

eissn

1473-4893

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2025-01-23

Spatial coverage

England

Language

English